The Chicxulub impactor, as it is called, was somewhere between 10 and 15 kilometres in diameter. The collision was devastating: rocks from deep within Earth’s crust were raised 25 kilometres ...
The landscape here is peppered with deep wells of water, called cenotes. Every civilisation ... and it’s called Chicxulub. Now, to a geologist there are very few natural events that can create ...
Most at risk from these operations is the Ring of Cenotes Geohydrological Reserve, located in Homún on a site of global importance where the Chicxulub impact crater hit Earth 65 million years ago and ...